The current investigation examines the fluctuating behaviour of stiff pavement built on a two-parameter base and is influenced by aircraft loading impacts. This investigation is driven by the necessity for an accurate evaluation of pavement behaviour under elevated stress scenarios caused by aircraft, which can guide pavement design and upkeep. A stochastic numerical model, the vehicle-pavement interaction model (VPI), was created using a comprehensive 3D dynamic model of an aircraft vehicle and stationary runway roughness profiles. The rigid pavement is simulated using a computationally efficient 1D finite element mathematical model incorporating six DOF. The Pasternak model represents the soil medium, incorporating shear interaction between the spring elements. The pavement's irregularities are considered and replicated using a power spectral density (PSD) function. This assembled model was used to investigate the dynamical reaction of concrete pavement vibrations caused by the passing of an aircraft vehicle using MATLAB code. The dynamic governing differential equations of the aircraft's motion are developed and coupled with the pavement system equations. The coupled system is then solved in the time domain using the direct computational integration approach with the Newmark-Beta integration scheme, explicitly utilizing the linear average acceleration method. This approach is employed to resolve the equations that govern and assess the performance of the connected system. The current findings are being compared to existing analytical outcomes to verify the precision of the current coding. The research examined the impact of various pavement and aircraft vehicle behaviors and factors on the dynamic response of pavement, including the speed, main and auxiliary suspension components, mass and the load position of the aircraft, also the damping, random roughness, thickness, span length and elastic constant of the pavement, even, the modulus of subgrade of the foundation, the rigidity modulus of the shear layer. The findings demonstrate notable influences of aircraft speed and pavement surface roughness on various response parameters. Specifically, the results reveal that a higher subgrade modulus leads to decreased deflection, rotation, and bending moments. Conversely, longer span lengths tend to elevate response parameters while simultaneously reducing shear force. In conclusion, the results highlight the significance of critical factors, including velocity and subgrade modulus, in forecasting the performance of pavement subjected to aircraft loads. The present research is confined to the investigation of the dynamic's performance of the VPI simulation of airfield rigid pavement. The findings from this study can be expanded on by paving engineers to improve the structural effectiveness and reliability of the pavement, serving as a basis for subsequent fatigue analysis in response to diverse dynamic loads such as earthquake, temperature and vehicle load.
Rigid pavements built on an expansive subgrade often sustain damage due to differential movement caused by variations in the subgrade moisture content and the resulting swelling pressure. This study aims to introduce an approach based on swelling pressure for analyzing the deformation of rigid pavements. The analysis takes into consideration the effect of soil matric suction on the modulus of subgrade reaction and potential swelling pressure. The numerical analysis was carried out using the pasternak foundation model, wherein the pavement was idealized as an Euler-Bernoulli beam, the pasternak shear layer represented the granular sub-base supporting the pavement, and the expansive soil was modelled using winkler springs. To demonstrate the practical applicability of the proposed model, a case study is presented for an Indian site and the outcomes are presented. The parametric study clearly illustrates that the modulus of subgrade reaction of expansive soil is the most sensitive and significant parameter for improving the flexural response of the pavement. A flowchart outlining the evaluation procedure is included to provide a visual representation of the analysis process.
This paper reviews works on the dynamic analysis of flexible and rigid pavements under moving vehicles on the basis of continuum-based plane strain models and linear theories. The purpose of this review is to provide information about the existing works on the subject, critically discuss them and make suggestions for further research. The reviewed papers are presented on the basis of the various models for pavement-vehicle systems and the various methods for dynamically analyzing these systems. Flexible pavements are modeled by a homogeneous or layered half-plane with isotropic or anisotropic and linear elastic, viscoelastic or poroelastic material behavior. Rigid pavements are modeled by a beam or plate on a homogeneous or layered half-plane with material properties like the ones for flexible pavements. The vehicles are modeled as concentrated or distributed over a finite area loads moving with constant or time dependent speed. The above pavement-vehicle models are dynamically analyzed by analytical, analytical/numerical or purely numerical methods working in the time or frequency domain. Representative examples are presented to illustrate the models and methods of analysis, demonstrate their merits and assess the effects of the various parameters on pavement response. The paper closes with conclusions and suggestions for further research in the area. The significance of this research effort has to do with the presentation of the existing literature on the subject in a critical and easy to understand way with the aid of representative examples and the identification of new research areas.